RESUMO
Hearing assessment of 14 children suffered from urinary tract infection and treated by amikacin is reported. The dosage of amikacin was 7.5 mg/kg/daily for 10 days and the serum level of amikacin not exceeded the 35 mcg/ml. The aim of the study was on the one hand to determine the hearing damaging side effect of amikacin and on the other to assess the usefulness of objective methods for detection of hearing loss in this population. Authors used for screening a transient otoacoustic emission (TEOAE) during and after (2-4 weeks) therapy. If subjective and objective (TEOAE) methods gave a good result, no further checkup has considered as necessary, but if there were no evoked emission, acoustic brainstem response audiometry has been carried out for verification. It result no hearing loss could be detected in the measured specimen. In conclusion it has been stated that by proper dosage and serum level screening amikacin may no lead to hearing loss in children, and objective methods are valuable for hearing screening and monitoring of such population of children.